Boris Razinsky

Boris Razinsky
Personal information
Full nameBoris Davidovich Razinsky
Date of birthJuly 12, 1933
Place of birthLyubertsy, USSR
Date of death6 August 2012 (aged 79)
Place of deathMoscow, Russia
Playing positionGoalkeeper/Striker
Youth career
Pishchevik Tula
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1947–1951V/Ch Bologoye
1951GTsOLIFK Moscow
1952CSKA Moscow0
1952Kalinin City Team2(0)
1953MVO Moscow0(0)
1953FC Spartak Moscow1(0)
1954–1961CSKA Moscow160(2)
1961FC Spartak Moscow4(0)
1962FC Dynamo Kyiv18(0)
1963FC Chornomorets Odessa28(3)
1964Serp i Molot Moscow2(0)
1966SKA Odessa7(0)
1967–1968FC Metallurg Lipetsk?(23)
1969Politotdel Tashkent Oblast39(1)
1970FK Daugava Rīga8(0)
1970FC Ararat Yerevan11(0)
1971Volga Gorky
1972–1973Granit Tetyukhe
National team
1955–1956USSR3(−3)
Teams managed
1974Dvina Vitebsk (director)
1974CSKA Moscow (assistant)
1975–1976FK Daugava Rīga (scout)
1999Suwon Bluewings (assistant)
1999–2000FC Chernomorets Novorossiysk (assistant)
2001FC Khimki (assistant)
2001FC Chernomorets Novorossiysk (assistant)
2001–2002FC Volgar-Gazprom Astrakhan (assistant)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).
Olympic medal record
Competitor for  Soviet Union
Men's Football
Gold 1956 Melbourne Team Competition

Boris Davidovich Razinsky (Russian: Борис Давидович Разинский) (July 12, 1933 — August 6, 2012) was a Soviet Russian football player and manager of Jewish ethnicity.[1] He played both as a goalkeeper and as a striker (usually keeping one specific position while playing at the same club). He played in goal for the national team as a backup to Lev Yashin. He was born in Lyubertsy and died in Moscow.[2]

Biography

Honours

International career

Razinsky made his debut for USSR on October 23, 1955, in a friendly against France.

Personal life

He is Jewish.[3] In 2009, Razinsky attended the 2009 Maccabiah Games to watch his grandson participate in the under-18 football competition. Razinsky's visit was marred by a brawl between the Russian and Argentine sides and both squads were told not to return for the 2013 Maccabiah Games.[4]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Benjamin Chernukhin (23 December 2010). Еврейский Футбольный Мир – 8. [Jewish World Football – 8.] (in Russian). Sem40. Retrieved August 22, 2014.
  2. "Former Soviet keeper Razinsky dies at 79". Eurosport. August 7, 2012. Retrieved August 22, 2014.
  3. "Jews in Sport in the USSR". The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe. Retrieved August 22, 2014.
  4. Swiedler, Eli (July 22, 2009). המכביה פתוחה בפני כל היהודים? לא אחרי הקטטה בטורניר הכדורגל [The Maccabiah Is Open To All Jews? Not After The Brawl At The Football Tournament]. Haaretz (in Hebrew). Retrieved August 22, 2014.

External links